Seeing Beyond Flesh Judgment

John 8:15 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read John 8 in context

Scripture Focus

15Ye judge after the flesh; I judge no man.
John 8:15

Biblical Context

It states that people are judged by outward, fleshly appearances, while the speaker refuses to judge anyone.

Neville's Inner Vision

On the inner screen, 'ye judge after the flesh' exposes a habit of the mind: you measure others by form, role, or circumstance. But the I AM within you does not judge; it recognizes only the truth of life as one. When you claim, 'I judge no man,' you are not denying discernment, you are releasing the illusion of separation. Remember: events and people are your own inner movements. To judge is to project a lack you hold about yourself—an unhealed state you keep alive by naming another. By choosing the I AM vantage, you reframe every encounter as an opportunity to know unity. The moment you assume this non-judgmental state, the appearance of division dissolves, and healing begins in your own consciousness. The so-called outside world becomes a reflection of the inner state you cultivate. Practice daily: imagine a person you would condemn, and declare inwardly that they are another form of your own awareness, deserving of mercy. In time, your reality mirrors your choice, and discernment becomes compassionate perception grounded in the I AM.

Practice This Now

Imaginative act: Close your eyes and picture someone you would judge. Then say inwardly, 'I am not judging you; you are a radiant form of my I AM,' and feel the truth in your chest as you revise your state to unity.

The Bible Through Neville

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